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NORMANDY

[1]

O

NE of those great events in English history, which occur at distant intervals, and form, respectively, a sort of
bound or landmark, to which all other events, preceding or following them for centuries, are referred, is what
is called the Norman Conquest. The Norman Conquest was, in fact, the accession of William, duke of Normandy, to
the English throne. This accession was not altogether a matter of military force, for William claimed a right
to the throne, which, if not altogether perfect, was, as he maintained, at any rate superior to that of the
prince against whom he contended. The rightfulness of his claim was, however, a matter of little consequence,
except so far as the moral influence of it aided him in gaining possession. The right to rule was, in those
days,
[14] rather more openly and nakedly, though not much more really, than it is now, the right of the strongest.

Normandy, William's native land, is a very rich and beautiful province in the north of France. The following
map shows its situation:

MAPOF ENGLANDANDPARTOF FRANCE, SHOWINGTHESITUATIONOF NORMANDY.

[15] It lies, as will be seen upon the map, on the coast of France, adjoining the English Channel. The Channel is
here irregular in form, but may be, perhaps, on the average, one hundred miles wide. The line of coast on the
southern side of the Channel, which forms, of course, the northern border of Normandy, is a range of cliffs,
which are almost perpendicular toward the sea, and which frown forbiddingly upon every ship that sails along
the shore. Here and there, it is true, a river opens a passage for itself among these cliffs from the
interior, and these river mouths would form harbors into which ships might enter from the offing, were it not
that the northwestern winds prevail so generally, and drive such a continual swell of rolling surges in upon
the shore, that they choke up all these estuary openings, as well as every natural indentation of the land,
with shoals and bars of sand and shingle. The reverse is the case with the northern, or English shore of this
famous channel. There the harbors formed by the mouths of the rivers, or by the sinuosities of the shore, are
open and accessible, and at the same time sheltered from the winds and the sea. Thus, while the northern or
English shore has been, for many centuries, all the time enticing
[16] the seaman in and out over the calm, deep, and sheltered waters which there penetrate the land, the southern
side has been an almost impassable barrier, consisting of a long line of frowning cliffs, with every opening
through it choked with shoals and sand-banks, and guarded by the rolling and tumbling of surges which scarcely
ever rest.

It is in a great measure owing to these great physical differences between the two shores, that the people who
live upon the one side, though of the same stock and origin with those who live upon the other, have become so
vastly superior to them in respect to naval exploits and power. They are really of the same stock and origin,
since both England and the northern part of France were overrun and settled by what is called the Scandinavian
race, that is, people from Norway, Denmark, and other countries on the Baltic. These people were called the
Northmen in the histories of those times. Those who landed in England are generally termed
Danes, though but a small portion of them came really from Denmark. They were all, however, of the same
parent stock, and possessed the same qualities of courage, energy, and fearless love of adventure and of danger
[17] which distinguish their descendants at the present day. They came down in those early times in great military
hordes, and in fleets of piratical ships, through the German Ocean and the various British seas, braving every
hardship and every imaginable danger, to find new regions to dwell in, more genial, and fertile, and rich than
their own native northern climes. In these days they evince the same energy, and endure equal privations and
hardships, in hunting whales in the Pacific Ocean; in overrunning India, and seizing its sources of wealth and
power; or in sallying forth, whole fleets of adventurers at a time, to go more than half round the globe, to
dig for gold in California. The times and circumstances have changed, but the race and spirit are the same.

Normandy takes its name from the Northmen. It was the province of France which the Northmen made peculiarly
their own. They gained access to it from the sea by the River Seine, which, as will be seen from the map,
flows, as it were, through the heart of the country. The lower part of this river, and the sea around its
mouth, are much choked up with sand and gravel, which the waves have been for ages washing in. Their incessant
industry
[18] would result in closing up the passage entirely, were it not that the waters of the river must have an outlet;
and thus the current, setting outward, wages perpetual war with the surf and surges which are continually
breaking in. The expeditions of the Northmen, however, found their way through all these obstructions. They
ascended the river with their ships, and finally gained a permanent settlement in the country. They had
occupied the country for some centuries at the time when our story begins—the province being governed by a line
of princes—almost, if not quite, independent sovereigns—called the Dukes of Normandy.

The first Duke of Normandy, and the founder of the line—the chieftain who originally invaded and conquered the
country—was a wild and half-savage hero from the north, named Rollo. He is often, in history, called Rollo the
Dane. Norway was his native land. He was a chieftain by birth there, and, being of a wild and adventurous
disposition, he collected a band of followers, and committed with them so many piracies and robberies, that at
length the king of the country expelled him.

Rollo seems not to have considered this banishment as any very great calamity, since, far
[19] from interrupting his career of piracy and plunder, it only widened the field on which he was to pursue it. He
accordingly increased the equipment and the force of his fleet, enlisted more followers, and set sail across
the northern part of the German Ocean toward the British shores.

Off the northwestern coast of Scotland there are some groups of mountainous and gloomy islands, which have
been, in many different periods of the world, the refuge of fugitives and outlaws. Rollo made these islands his
rendezvous now; and he found collected there many other similar spirits, who had fled to these lonely retreats,
some on account of political disturbances in which they had become involved, and some on account of their
crimes. Rollo's impetuous, ardent, and self-confident character inspired them with new energy and zeal. They
gathered around him as their leader. Finding his strength thus increasing, he formed a scheme of concentrating
all the force that he could command, so as to organize a grand expedition to proceed to the southward, and
endeavor to find some pleasant country which they could seize and settle upon, and make their own. The
desperate adventurers around him were
[20] ready enough to enter into this scheme. The fleet was refitted, provisioned, and equipped. The expedition was
organized, arms and munitions of war provided, and when all was ready they set sail. They had no definite plan
in respect to the place of their destination, their intention being to make themselves a home on the first
favorable spot that they should find.

They moved southward, cruising at first along the coast of Scotland, and then of England. They made several
fruitless attempts to land on the English shores, but were every where repulsed. The time when these events
took place was during the reign of Alfred the Great. Through Alfred's wise and efficient measures the whole of
his frontier had been put into a perfect state of defense, and Rollo found that there was no hope for him
there. He accordingly moved on toward the Straits of Dover; but, before passing them, he made a descent upon
the coast of Flanders. Here there was a country named Hainault. It was governed by a potentate called the Count
of Hainault. Rollo made war upon him, defeated him in battle, took him prisoner, and then compelled the
countess his wife to raise and pay him an immense sum for his ransom. Thus he
replen- [21] ished his treasury by an exploit which was considered in those days very great and glorious. To perpetrate such
a deed now, unless it were on a very great scale, would be to incur the universal reprobation of mankind; but
Rollo, by doing it then, not only enriched his coffers, but acquired a very extended and honorable fame.

For some reason or other, Rollo did not attempt to take permanent possession of Hainault, but, after receiving
his ransom money, and replenishing his ammunition and stores, he sailed away with his fleet, and, turning
westward, he passed through the Straits of Dover, and cruised along the coast of France. He found that the
country on the French side of the channel, though equally rich and beautiful with the opposite shore, was in a
very different state of defense. He entered the mouth of the Seine. He was embarrassed at first by the
difficulties of the navigation in entering the river; but as there was no efficient enemy to oppose him, he
soon triumphed over these difficulties, and, once fairly in the river, he found no difficulty in ascending to
Rouen.

In the mean time, the King of France, whose
[22] name was Charles, and who is generally designated in history as Charles the Simple, began to collect an army to
meet the invader. Rollo, however, had made himself master of Rouen before Charles was able to offer him any
effectual opposition. Rouen was already a strong place, but Rollo made it stronger. He enlarged and repaired
the fortifications, built store-houses, established a garrison, and, in a word, made all the arrangements
requisite for securing an impregnable position for himself and his army.

A long and obstinate war followed between Rollo and Charles, Rollo being almost uniformly victorious in the
combats that took place. Rollo became more and more proud and imperious in proportion to his success. He drove
the French king from port to port, and from field to field, until he made himself master of a large part of the
north of France, over which he gradually established a regular government of his own. Charles struggled in vain
to resist these encroachments. Rollo continually defeated him; and finally he shut him up and besieged him in
Paris itself. At length Charles was compelled to enter into negotiations for peace. Rollo demanded that the
large and rich tract on both sides of the Seine, next the sea—
[23] the same, in fact, that now constitutes Normandy—should be ceded to him and his followers for their permanent
possession. Charles was extremely unwilling thus to alienate a part of his kingdom. He would not consent to
cede it absolutely and entirely, so as to make it an independent realm. It should be a dukedom, and not a
separate kingdom, so that it might continue still a part off his own royal domains—Rollo to reign over it as a
duke, and to acknowledge a general allegiance to the French king. Rollo agreed to this. The war had been now
protracted so long that he began himself to desire repose. It was more than thirty years since the time of his
landing.

Charles had a daughter named Giselle, and it was a part of the treaty of peace that she should become Rollo's
wife. He also agreed to become a Christian. Thus there were, in the execution of the treaty, three ceremonies
to be performed. First, Rollo was to do homage, as it was called, for his duchy; for it was the custom in those
days for subordinate princes, who held their possessions of some higher and more strictly sovereign power, to
perform certain ceremonies in the presence of their superior lord, which was called doing homage. These
cere- [24] monies were of various kinds in different countries, though they were all intended to express the submission of
the dependent prince to the superior authority and power of the higher potentate of whom he held his lands.
This act of homage was therefore to be performed, and next to the homage was to come the baptism, and after the
baptism, the marriage.

When, however, the time came for the performance of the first of these ceremonies, and all the great chieftains
and potentates of the respective armies were assembled to witness it, Rollo, it was found, would not submit to
what the customs of the French monarchy required. He ought to kneel before the king, and put his hands, clasped
together, between the king's hands, in token of submission, and then to kiss his foot, which was covered with
an elegantly fashioned slipper on such occasions. Rollo would do all except the last; but that, no
remonstrances, urgencies, or persuasions would induce him to consent to.

And yet it was not a very unusual sign or token of political subordination to sovereign power in those days.
The pope had exacted it even of an emperor a hundred years before; and it is continued by that dignitary to the
[25] present day, on certain state occasions; though in the case of the pope, there is embroidered on the slipper
which the kneeling suppliant kisses, a cross, so that he who humbles himself to this ceremony may consider, if
he pleases, that it is that sacred symbol of the divine Redeemer's sufferings and death that he so reverently
kisses, and not the human foot by which it is covered.

Rollo could not be made to consent, himself, to kiss King Charles's foot; and, finally, the difficulty was
compromised by his agreeing to do it by proxy. He ordered one of his courtiers to perform that part of the
ceremony. The courtier obeyed, but when he came to lift the foot, he did it so rudely and lifted it so high as
to turn the monarch over off his seat. This made a laugh, but Rollo was too powerful for Charles to think of
resenting it.

A few days after this Rollo was baptized in the cathedral church at Rouen, with great pomp and parade; and
then, on the following week, he was married to Giselle. The din of war in which he had lived for more than
thirty years was now changed into festivities and rejoicings. He took full and peaceable possession of his
dukedom, and governed it for the
remain- [26] der of his days with great wisdom, and lived in great prosperity. He made it, in fact, one of the richest and most
prosperous realms in Europe, and laid the foundations of still higher degrees of greatness and power, which
were gradually developed after his death. And this was the origin of Normandy.

It appears thus that this part of France was seized by Rollo and his Northmen partly because it was nearest at
hand to them, being accessible from the English Channel through the River Seine, and partly on account of its
exceeding richness and fertility. It has been famous in every age as the garden of France, and travelers at the
present day gaze upon its picturesque and beautiful scenery with the highest admiration and pleasure. And yet
the scenes which are there presented to the view are wholly unlike those which constitute picturesque and
beautiful rural scenery in England and America. In Normandy, the land is not inclosed. No hedges, fences, or
walls break the continuity of the surface, but vast tracts spread in every direction, divided into plots and
squares, of various sizes and forms, by the varieties of cultivation, like a vast carpet of an irregular
tesselated pattern, and varied in the color by a
thou- [27] sand hues of brown and green. Here and there vast forests extend, where countless thousands of trees, though
ancient and venerable in form, stand in rows, mathematically arranged, as they were planted centuries ago.
These are royal demesnes, and hunting grounds, and parks connected with the country palaces of the kings or the
chateaux of the ancient nobility. The cultivators of the soil live, not, as in America, in little farm-houses
built along the road-sides and dotting the slopes of the hills, but in compact villages, consisting of ancient
dwellings of brick or stone, densely packed together along a single street, from which the laborers issue, in
picturesque dresses, men and women together, every morning, to go miles, perhaps, to the scene of their daily
toil. Except these villages, and the occasional appearance of an ancient chateau, no habitations are seen. The
country seems a vast solitude, teeming every where, however, with fertility and beauty. The roads which
traverse these scenes are magnificent avenues, broad, straight, continuing for many miles an undeviating course
over the undulations of the land, with nothing to separate them from the expanse of cultivation and
fruitfulness on either hand but rows of ancient and venerable trees.
[28] Between these rows of trees the traveler sees an interminable vista extending both before him and behind him.
In England, the public road winds beautifully between wails overhung with shrubbery, or hedge-rows, with stiles
or gateways here and there, revealing hamlets or cottages, which appear and disappear in a rapid and endlessly
varied succession, as the road meanders, like a rivulet, between its beautiful banks. In a word, the public
highway in England is beautiful; in France it is grand.

The greatest city in Normandy in modern times is Rouen, which is situated, as will be seen by referring to the
map at the commencement of this chapter, on the Seine, half way between Paris and the sea. At the mouth of the
Seine, or, rather, on the northern shore of the estuary which forms the mouth of the river, is a small inlet,
which has been found to afford, on the whole, the best facilities for a harbor that can be found on the whole
line of the coast. Even this little port, however, is so filled up with sand, that when the water recedes at
low tide, it leaves the shipping all aground. The inlet would, in fact, probably become filled up entirely were
it not for artificial means taken to prevent it. There are
[29] locks and gateways built in such a manner as to retain a large body of water until the tide is down, and then
these gates are opened, and the water is allowed to rush out all together, carrying with it the mud and sand
which had begun to accumulate. This haven, being, on the whole, the best and most commodious on the coast, was
called the harbor, or, as the French expressed it in their language, le havre, the word
havre meaning harbor. In fact, the name was in full le havre de grace, as if the Normans
considered it a matter of special good luck to have even such a chance of a harbor as this at the mouth of
their river. The English world have, however, dropped all except the principal word from this long phrase of
designation, and call the port simply Havre.

From Rollo the line of Dukes of Normandy continued in uninterrupted succession down to the time of William, a
period of about a hundred and fifty years. The country increased all the time in wealth, in population, and in
prosperity. The original inhabitants were not, however, expelled; they remained as peasants, herdsmen, and
agriculturists, while the Norman chieftains settled over them, holding severally
[30] large estates of land which William granted them. The races gradually became intermingled, though they
continued for many centuries to evince the superior spirit and energy which was infused into the population by
the Norman stock. In fact, it is thought by many observers that that superiority continues to the present day.